A recent local headline about a court sentencing included this quote: “most stupid fraud in history.” What was the crime?

A south suburban man was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison Tuesday in a massive, $14 million fraud scheme where he collected kickbacks for filing more than 1,500 bogus loan applications at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic…
According to Assistant U.S. Attorney Elie Zenner, Shrieteh submitted more than 1,500 false PPP loan applications on behalf of at least 1,025 clients beginning in 2020, causing some $14 million of funds to be dispersed, most of which was forgiven by the U.S. government…
As the fraud associated with the PPP loans began making national news, Shrieteh acknowledged to an associate that he was being paid big money, saying in one text message, “Mother(expletive) it’s not coffee,” according to prosecutors.
“You gonna put my ass in jail soon,” Shrieteh wrote, according to the prosecution memo. “Most stupid fraud in history.”
I remember first really thinking about white collar crime in an undergraduate criminology course. Among all the things we did that semester, we spent about four weeks considering white collar crime and its consequences. It often draws less punishment than violent crime. It may be more common than violent crime but tends to get less attention. It can affect a lot of people.
In this particular case, a suburban tax preparer collected money as he used his clients to defraud the federal government. The total PPP loan program in the COVID-19 pandemic involved a lot of money. This was certainly just a drop in the bucket, even as the absolute value of fraud would be a large amount of money for most people.
Is this the “most stupid fraud in history” because this tax preparer was caught? Would lots of people try to defraud the government or take money from a large corporation because they might barely know the money as gone?
Such monies could have gone to helping other people. Taxpayer dollars could have been spent more wisely. And this happens in corporations and other organizations as well; employees can embezzle, cheat, pollute, skirt regulations in ways hurt people.
I bet there might be other examples of white collar crime that people think qualifies as the “most stupid fraud in history.”








